This is my type of man. I'm attracted to men who do physically hard work. My experience is that even those are taken. Money is not a problem. I have money and I make a lot more every day. |
Your language identifies you. This is only a "problem" if you think women need to feel worse about themselves. If it's just a simple truth, that will be clear pretty quickly. Not a "problem" for anyone. But if you are seething about women who aren't downtrodden enough, then sure, it's a real problem for you. Sorry about it, champ. |
I don’t think they are taken. He’s my age and I do think it’s true lots of divorced women in their 40s want either a younger fling for excitement/validation or a wallet. So nice average looks 40s men who aren’t rich fall under the radar, they also may not be great at OLD profiles. If a lady truly wants a relationship and can read between the lines they exist! |
Generally those that are financially successful and divorcing never hit the dating pool. They are snatched up by someone at work or that they know. |
This! |
I hope you don't intend to dissipate your semen on them either. Dud. |
This. The second they announce they are divorcing they get set up. That doesn’t happen to women. The second they announce they’re divorcing people drop them like a stone. |
Are you also maxing retirement? Bc your take home is like $250K gross. It’s hard to be broke on that although you’d need to partner with an equivalent earned to afford a nice house in this area. If you already have one with a low mortgage and good retirement savings you’re not broke, you just cash poor. |
This. Don’t be an idiot! The good-looking financially stable guys are already taken, silly. They aren’t going on these apps. You need to stop trying to land a top tier dude. Either change your physical standards or change your financial standards. |
Yes money is the number one criteria women are using and it’s just not your peer group. Lots of younger women will consider an old man if the money is right for their situation. |
Did you miss the part where she and not his kids cares for him in old age? The kids benefit by being able to pursue their careers instead of caring for an older parent and/or using their or his money to pay for his care. |
OLD is a cesspool for many reasons besides broke guys. I've posted recently here about my relative who was about to go on a first date with a guy via OLD, and I Googled him and found he'd skipped out on a trial in another state--he was a cheating landlord and was being prosecuted by the state! Yet he'd moved to my relative's state and started buying properties to rent out. Disgusting. She canceled that date immediately. Someone commenting on that post noted that she had matched with a guy on OLD who, it turned out, had actually serrved prison time for stalking an ex but was out and on OLD. Just not worth the risks, if guys like those end up there.
Relative has found a very happy and stable relationship with a man she met when he was volunteering at the nonprofit where she is a staff member. He retired fairly young and seems to be financially just fine, but more importantly, he shares her values and interests. I met my own DH through shared interests. Get off OLD and get out and do things which interest and involve YOU, and you increase the chances of at least meeting people who have similar values/hobbies from the start. |
Yes These are good numbers. About $15-20k a year to spend on the relationship outside your other expenses. I don't think that is gold digging. |
Ok got it. 200k/yr and 1M in assets is “broke” by the standards of single over the hill women who are shopping on OLD. Maybe that explains the problem? |
Yes. The truly wealthy ones have no need for OLD. |